ICE detains Indigenous people in Minneapolis, tribes cite treaty violations
January 14, 2026 Gary Wilson

Rachel Dionne Thunder, an Indigenous activist, shares her experience of federal agents attempting to detain her on Jan. 9.
Federal immigration agents from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) have seized at least five Indigenous people during raids in Minneapolis in early January, triggering furious denunciations from tribal governments who say the arrests violate binding treaties.
The Oglala Sioux Tribe confirmed that ICE is holding four Oglala Lakota people who were arrested near the Little Earth housing complex in the East Phillips neighborhood. A fifth person, Jose Roberto Ramirez, a 20-year-old Red Lake Anishinaabe man, was also detained after ICE agents repeatedly punched him in the face while he was complying with their orders, according to video evidence and family testimony.
“This is a treaty violation. Treaties are not optional. Sovereignty is not conditional. Our citizens are not negotiable,” Oglala Sioux Tribe President Frank Star Comes Out said in a statement. “The irony is not lost on us.”
Militarized raids target Indigenous people
The detentions occurred as roughly 2,000 ICE agents and other federal personnel swarmed the Twin Cities in one of the largest immigration enforcement operations in the region’s history. The raids followed the Jan. 8 killing of Renee Nicole Good, a legal observer and mother of three, who was shot by ICE agents during protests against the crackdown — underscoring the level of force now being deployed against entire communities.
Tribal leaders say ICE has no jurisdiction
When the Oglala Sioux Tribe demanded information about its detained members, federal officials responded with an ultimatum: the tribe would only receive details if it entered into a formal agreement with ICE. Tribal leadership refused, stating that such an agreement would directly violate treaties that explicitly recognize tribal sovereignty and self-governance.
“We will not enter an agreement that would authorize, or make it easier for, ICE or Homeland Security to come onto our tribal homeland to arrest or detain our tribal members,” Star Comes Out wrote in a memo addressed to Interior Secretary Doug Burgum and Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem.
The memorandum states plainly that “tribal citizens are not aliens” and are “categorically outside immigration jurisdiction.” The implication is unavoidable: federal agents are acting as if treaties do not exist.
Detentions tied to a site of genocide
ICE has established its base of operations at Fort Snelling, a site inseparable from the history of genocide and forced removal in Minnesota. In 1862, the U.S. military imprisoned Dakota people at Fort Snelling following the U.S.-Dakota War, a campaign that culminated in the mass execution of 38 Dakota men — the largest mass execution in U.S. history.
“The fact that Lakota citizens are reported to be held at Fort Snelling — a site forever tied to the Dakota 38+2 — underscores why treaty obligations and federal accountability matter today, not just in history,” Star Comes Out said.
Community mobilizes to block arrests
Indigenous communities have responded with rapid-response defense networks aimed at physically protecting tribal citizens from ICE seizures. On Jan. 10, Rachel Dionne-Thunder, founder of the Indigenous Peoples Movement, narrowly avoided arrest after ICE agents surrounded her vehicle and threatened to smash her window. Community members quickly converged on the scene, forcing agents to retreat.
“ICE returned to their vehicle and left me alone when they saw the power of our people,” Dionne-Thunder said at a press conference. “The real power is with the people — with our connection to each other and to the earth. That’s what they’re afraid of.”
Sam Strong, secretary of the Red Lake Chippewa Nation, said approximately 8,000 Red Lake citizens live in Minneapolis and are directly threatened by the raids. “We are going to protect each and every one of them, including our descendants,” Strong said. “We are going to defend our people, and we are going to stand up for all of Minneapolis, all of Minnesota.”
Tribal governments including the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe, Lac Courte Oreilles, and the Fond du Lac Band have issued statements condemning the raids and circulating “Know Your Rights” guidance. Several tribes are distributing free tribal identification cards while warning that documentation alone does not guarantee safety from detention under ICE operations.
The Oglala Sioux Tribe has pledged aggressive legal action to secure the immediate release of its detained members.
Oglala Sioux Tribe bans Homeland Security’s Noem
In a related development, the tribe formally banned Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem from the Pine Ridge Reservation on Jan. 9, one day before the Minneapolis detentions were publicly confirmed.
The ban followed repeated comments by Noem, made while she was governor of South Dakota, claiming that “Mexican drug cartels” operate on tribal reservations and that murders on Pine Ridge were being committed by cartel members. Noem has also repeatedly described migration at the southern border as an “invasion.”
Star Comes Out rejected those claims outright, calling them a racist pretext for militarization and repression. He noted that many migrants arriving at the southern border are Indigenous people displaced by poverty, violence, and economic devastation rooted in U.S. imperialist policies.
“Calling the United States’ southern border an ‘invasion’ by illegal immigrants and criminal groups to justify deploying the National Guard is a red herring that the Oglala Sioux Tribe doesn’t support,” Star Comes Out said in the Jan. 9 statement announcing Noem’s ban from tribal lands.
The Native American Rights Fund has reiterated that ICE has no jurisdiction over Indigenous people in immigration matters and urged anyone whose rights have been violated to contact the organization at 303-447-8760.
https://www.struggle-la-lucha.org/2026/ ... iolations/
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“Now is the time”: Minnesota calls for general strike on January 23 to drive ICE out
Faith groups, labor unions, community organizations, businesses, and more have come together to mobilize millions to withdraw from the economy on the day of action.
January 13, 2026 by Devin B. Martinez
Minnesota community calls for day of action against ICE
The movement against ICE has continued to surge in Minneapolis and across the United States in the wake of the killing of Renee Good.
On January 13, a coalition of faith leaders, union presidents, business owners, and community figures in Minneapolis called on “every worker in Minnesota to refuse to show up to work” and “every single Minnesotan to not spend a dime” on Friday, January 23, to demand an end to the “violence and horror” that ICE has unleashed on the community and the agency’s complete removal from the state.
“We are going to leverage our economic power, our labor, our prayer for one another,” said JaNaé Bates, co-executive director of Isaiah MN, an interfaith and multiracial community organizing network.
“We are not going to shop, we are not going to work, we are not going to school on Friday, January 23.”
Dozens of labor unions, faith groups, businesses, and community organizations across the state are backing the call, with many more joining by the hour. Bates added, “Some people they call that a strike. For many of us, we say this is our right to refusal until something changes.”
Instead of participating in the economy, the organizers are calling on people to use the day to be conscious of the community. Faith groups will be fasting and praying. And at 2pm in downtown Minneapolis, organizers hope millions will gather for a mass march.
“Now is the time,” said the minister. “If you ever wondered for yourself: ‘When is the time that we do something different? When is the time that we stand up and say that this has to change? That this needs to end?’ The time is now.”
Violence in Minnesota backed by Nazi rhetoric in Washington
Speakers at the press conference expressed outrage at the ICE killing of Renee Good, whose “whistle blowing was returned by bullets”. They also described the escalating violence by ICE agents against the community in recent days. According to videos on circulating on social media from Minneapolis, ICE is raiding homes, separating families, dragging employees from their workplaces, pepper spraying people, assaulting high school students and staff, shooting activists with flashbangs, and more.
Meanwhile, the Trump administration has continued to defend the ICE operations with far-right rhetoric. US Border Patrol Commander Gregory Bovino recently called Minnesotans who oppose ICE “weak-minded”, echoing Nazi-era language about degeneracy and social cleansing. During a press conference on January 12, US Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem had the line “One of ours, all of yours” on her podium. A shocking moment given that the slogan is directly linked to Nazi collective-punishment doctrine. The line comes from an atrocity known as the Lidice Massacre. After one Nazi soldier was killed in a Czech village, the Nazis massacred 170 men and boys of that village, deported 200 women, and killed 82 children in gas chambers.
On the morning of January 13, in a post on his Truth Social platform, US President Trump again claimed that there are thousands of violent criminals in Minnesota that ICE is removing.
Responding to Trump, Bates declared that Minnesotans do want to remove the criminals: “Those thousands of people committing crimes in the state are the ICE officers! Who have been ramming their cars into our people, who have been stealing our people, kidnapping folks, who have been beating folks up and dropping them off in random locations.”
“The beauty about Minnesotans is that we have stood up for each other. We have come together,” she said. The minister was flanked by business owners, faith leaders, and community figures who echoed the demand for ICE to leave Minnesota and any other state in which it is operating.
Faith-labor unity: “Prayer is not a passive activity. It is one that is of action.”
James Earl Johnson, pastor at Lutheran Church of the Redeemer in Saint Paul, said that January 23 will be a day to reflect on the truth and the call from God to love our neighbors.
“We will pray for the power we have as people of faith to stop this madness, and for ICE to leave Minnesota and any other state where their actions are abusing the children of God.”
Pastor Brian, of Zion Baptist Church, described the ICE presence in Minneapolis as “spiritual warfare”.
“Darkness can’t drive out darkness, right? Only light can break darkness. And we choose to be light today. We choose to speak peace and not hate. We choose unity and not division. And so we will collectively come together on the 23rd.”
JaNaé Bates underlined the duty of faith leaders and congregations in this moment to use fasting and prayer to mobilize the community against the militarized federal forces in the twin cities.
“Prayer is not a passive activity. It is one that is of action. It is one about transformation. It is one where we get to transform ourselves and this world.”
She also highlighted that faith communities are not in this fight alone, listing dozens of unions, businesses, and inter-faith organizations that have already joined the “Day of Truth and Freedom”.
Day of Truth and Freedom
Amid the “lies” by the Trump administration framing Renee Good as a “domestic terrorist”, leaders say truth is essential at this moment.
“The truth is … that life is sacred,” said Bates. “In no way, shape or form should we dismiss someone being killed. In no way, shape or form should we give excuses to people being harmed every day, right? That is the truth.”
The faith leader added: “We need to take a real pause, a real time to step away and say, you know what? Here is actually what is happening.”
Bates made the point that to live in fear, surrounded by violence, is not freedom.
“Freedom is not just the freedom from constraints. It is the freedom to have safety. It is the freedom to have joy. It’s the freedom to be able to thrive. That is why we are choosing this day of freedom and truth.”
Community leaders reiterated the call for every single Minnesotan who loves “this notion of truth and freedom”, to refuse to work, shop, or go to school on January 23.
Organizers asked people to spend the next ten days before the day of action talking to businesses, small and large, and ask them what their plan is for Friday, January 23, and how they are standing up to demand that ICE leave Minnesota.
This thing called hope
“I am a woman of faith. And there’s this thing we talk about called hope,” Bates said, in response to a reporter asking her if she thinks the strike day will work to drive ICE out.
“I believe this is going to rock this state in the most beautiful and glorious of ways. It is going to open our eyes to what is possible,” the minister said.
“For too long we have been told nothing is possible. Bow down. Obey. And do whatever it is that somebody at the top says to do. But we know that that is a lie from the pit of hell. And let me tell y’all this, there is so much that is able to be accomplished when we come together and say no more to what is awful and yes to what is possible.”
https://peoplesdispatch.org/2026/01/13/ ... e-ice-out/
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The United States is turning into a brutal Gestapo state
George Samuelson
January 14, 2026
If Mrs. Good was a “domestic terrorist,” then the United States is a breeding ground of all those millions of “terrorists” who drive around town with their families inside of SUVs.
Americans took to the streets over the weekend in over 1,000 protests across the country to demand justice for a mother who was shot dead by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)
Renee Nicole Good was your typical suburban American. She was the mother of three children and liked to write poetry. But on January 7, her life was cut tragically short when she was shot in the head by an ICE agent, yet another tragedy that has sharply divided the nation. The protesters insist that Good was unjustly killed, and the visual evidence of the incident strongly supports that argument.
Good was seen on video blocking a neighborhood street with her SUV. While that is certainly grounds for law enforcement to arrive on the scene, what happened in the course of action defies logic. As two ICE agents approach the vehicle, no attempt to calmly converse with Good was seen. Instead, one of the agents grabs the door handle and aggressively demanded that Good exit the vehicle. Obviously scared by the encounter, Good made a fatal decision as she attempted to flee the scene. This caused the second officer, who was standing off to the left in front of the vehicle, to open fire at the windshield with three bullets, hitting Good in the head and killing her instantly.
Most people by now recognize the difference between a regular police stop and the abuse of police powers. A routine police stop involves the officer speaking to the driver in a calm manner while performing the necessary task of checking documents, like the driver’s license and registration. Most Americans are rightly frightened when they get pulled over by the police, and this necessitates that the intervening officer keep the situation under control. That was clearly not the case with Renee Good, who had the misfortune of coming in contact with an ICE agent who is clearly in the wrong profession.
While the jury is still out on the incident, it does not bode well for civil rights in the United States how Good was treated by the Trump administration following the cold-blooded murder. Homeland Security Secretary, Kristi Noem, portrayed the victim, a mother and award-winning poet, as a “domestic terrorist”. Good, Noem continued without providing any evidence, had been “stalking and impeding” ICE officers before “weaponizing her vehicle” in an effort to run over the agent who ultimately killed her.
The victim-blaming did not end there. Tricia McLaughlin, assistant secretary of the Department of Homeland Security and a spokesperson for ICE, declared in a post on X that “one of these violent rioters weaponized her vehicle, attempting to run over our law enforcement officers in an attempt to kill them – an act of domestic terrorism”.
And just like that, an American mother has been placed in the same category as Osama bin Laden. This gross characterization will only serve to reinforce law enforcement in the United States that they are justified for using any means necessary to fight against “the enemy,” which are the very people they are supposed to protect. Two days after the killing of Mrs. Good, Border Patrol agents in Portland, Oregon shot at the occupants of a vehicle as they attempted to flee.
When the Border Patrol agents identified themselves to the car’s occupants, “the driver weaponized his vehicle and attempted to run over the law enforcement agents,” McLaughlin said. One agent, “fearing for his life and safety,” fired a shot, and the driver sped off with the passenger, she said. The occupants of the vehicle survived the attack while an investigation into the shooting is unlikely to provide any real answers.
Of course, there are times when there is no choice but for the authorities to use deadly force when confronting certain individuals in particular cases. What is disturbing about the recent incidences, however, is that the Trump administration is tossing around explosive terms like “domestic terrorists” and “rioters” before any investigation has begun.
It is very difficult to believe that Mrs. Good was a “domestic terrorist.” If that were true, then the United States is a breeding ground of all those millions of ‘terrorists’ who drive around town with their families inside of SUVs. The US Constitution clearly provides for the American people to have the freedom of speech, the freedom of assembly and the freedom to address the wrongs of the US government. All of those liberties were glaringly denied to this single American mother, who tragically lost her life due to the brazen behavior of law enforcement. The Trump administration has a duty to not only round up illegal immigrants, but to make sure American citizens are not treated like terrorists in the process.
https://strategic-culture.su/news/2026/ ... apo-state/
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Renee Good, Keith Porter and the Normalization of Police Violence
Margaret Kimberley, BAR Executive Editor and Senior Columnist 14 Jan 2026

Law enforcement in the United States is responsible for more than 1,100 deaths in a typical year. This level of bloodshed goes unnoted even when police killings are deemed newsworthy and attract public attention. Police impunity is accepted and normalized by millions of people.
The fatal shooting of Renee Nicole Good by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers in Minneapolis, Minnesota, has ignited a firestorm of condemnation and protest across the country. The Trump administration unleashed ICE not just on undocumented immigrants, but on anyone who opposes their actions in any way, or, like Good, may be in the line of fire because they attempted to protest. ICE officers have assaulted not just the people they seek to capture, but also people trying to defend them, and charged them criminally with obstruction. The scenes of assaults and violent kidnappings are shocking to the conscience of millions of people and have become a focal point for protest in the U.S.
Despite the righteous outrage evoked by Nicole Good’s killing, however, it is important to remember that her experience was not at all singular. The Mapping Police Violence project reports that at least 1,182 people were killed by police in the United States in 2025, an average of at least three people every day. There were only seven days in 2025 during which there were no documented instances of police killing anyone.
It is inevitable that the shooting raises discussions on racism and state violence, as well it should. But white people like Ms. Good can also be found on this awful list. Of the 1,182 people killed by police in 2025, 397 were white. It is still true that Black people are the most likely to be killed by police, but the level of carnage itself is striking, with the U.S. once again being an outlier nation in a terrible metric.
Periodically, a police killing will electrify public attention, as happened with George Floyd, also in Minneapolis, in 2020. The video footage of his murder galvanized masses of people around the country in numbers that had not been seen for decades. Yet the focus on highly publicized cases obscures a disturbing fact. State violence is normalized to such an extent that what is a common occurrence is treated as though it is a rarity.
Of course, it is very necessary to dissect and to analyze body camera footage and videos from bystanders, and as always, to question law enforcement accounts of their actions. But there is a larger question at work about rights we think we have when we actually don’t, and how what passes for a criminal justice system very rarely punishes murder when committed by people who wear law enforcement uniforms.
There is another recent case of a fatal shooting committed by ICE. On December 31, 2025, a Black man named Keith Porter was shot to death by an off-duty ICE officer in Los Angeles, California. The Los Angeles police have not identified the shooter nor have they provided information on their investigation, allowing the Department of Homeland Security to comment on its own agency, which refers to Porter as an “active shooter” who allegedly exchanged gunfire with the ICE officer. This response to Porter’s killing is far more typical, with the victim’s actions being questioned while the person who took his life is defended or, as in this case, is allowed to disappear altogether.
The outrage expressed after the shooting of Renee Good gained national attention because it involved ICE in a state specifically targeted by the Trump administration for enhanced enforcement, and—of course—because she was white. Yet the righteous response is partly misguided because the narratives almost always express shock that a white woman was killed. But, in reality, white people are killed all the time by police, an average of once every day. Of course, Black people are also killed every day by police, but as a smaller percentage of the population, that number is an indicator of the high levels of oppression exercised against Black people.
Protests surrounding police murders follow the same sad pattern of temporary media attention, righteous indignation, and calls for reform or abolition, while little is said about the impunity that leads to more than 1,100 people being killed every year. Policing is one of the most well-funded governmental operations in the U.S. ICE is now the biggest federal law enforcement agency, but nationwide, local and state police departments are funded to the tune of $178 billion annually. Not only is ICE the biggest federal law enforcement agency, but its budget is larger than the military budgets of most countries.
The United States is a police state in the truest sense of the term, and the bloodshed that sometimes boils over into national consciousness should be recognized as being common and not a strange occurrence. If that acknowledgement is not made amid the protests, then those protests are for naught.
As Black Agenda Report pointed out in 2017, the drive to keep Black people under control cannot always be controlled and thus, there are white victims. An armed police force given a mandate to kill inevitably will endanger everyone. The genie cannot be put back into the bottle if the use of force is given state sanction.
That sanction comes from the majority of white people, who demand that Black people be surveilled, locked up and shot. The Minnesotans who took to the streets to denounce the killings of George Floyd and Renee Good are to be commended, yet they are the outliers in their community. Police violence is normalized because it is what millions of other white people want. When members of that same group are victimized, they are caught in a conundrum. Disputed accounts about what transpired before ICE officer Jonathan Ross shot Renee Good are largely biased in his favor. Showing any skepticism about his actions would create troublesome cognitive dissonance.
Good is that odd white person who has been vilified because she was murdered by an agent of the state. The Department of Homeland Security said that her actions constituted “domestic terrorism.” The President and Vice President of the United States have both called her “violent,” “radical,” and a participant in “classic terrorism.” Porter gets the usual treatment. The man who shot and killed him was a resident of the same apartment complex. Porter’s family said he was firing into the air in a New Year’s Eve celebration and posed no danger to anyone. Currently, there are no witnesses to the shooting, and there is no video evidence. The account of his unnamed killer is given credence and protection. Keith Porter’s family has secured legal counsel but if his case follows the usual trajectory, they may win monetary damages but the leveling of any criminal charges against his murderer is highly unlikely.
The U.S. Department of Justice is not investigating Good’s killing but is instead investigating her wife and her actions, and her background. Six federal prosecutors recently resigned, reportedly in protest over the choice of the investigation target. Minnesota state prosecutors are asserting their rights to carry on an independent investigation. So it is possible that there may be some justice for Good But it is extremely unlikely that there will be any for Porter. Regardless of the outcome, Good is not coming back to life.
The U.S. often refers to nations named as enemies as “state sponsors of terrorism.” It doesn’t mean much except that the country doesn’t act in ways that the U.S. wants. State-sponsored terrorism is far more common in this country, and it comes under the guise of providing protection. The perpetrators may be ICE or the NYPD, or LAPD or some other iteration. When killing is justified by the agents of these entities, then Renee Good, Keith Porter, and more than a thousand unnamed people every year, will pay the price as long as the determination to give a license to kill continues.
https://blackagendareport.com/renee-goo ... e-violence
Spinning Half-truth straw into big lie gold…
Raymond Nat Turner, BAR poet-in-residence 14 Jan 2026
POP-POP-POP … One, two, three kill shots disturbing
ICE-cold Minnesota morning. Morning frozen in the past.
Bloodstained airbag. Driver-side door ajar. A
Third Reich-ish morning ambush on crooked legs of big lies …
Expletives dripping from masked lips— shooter man struts
away after blasting 3 holes into the bullseye. No pulse to check.
No blood to scrub. No tears to fight. He prances away as if it was
routine rifle range target practice. Or, the video game of — Gaza.
Made his bones. No one to answer to but remote-controlled, traitorous,
CRC: Cruel Reich Cult. They got his back. The violence-worshipping
vampiric cult celebrates bloodshed. And for its Fox-box foot soldiers
heirs of Goebbels quickly begin to spin half-truth straw into big lie gold …
No semiautomatic “thoughts and prayers.” No “Political violence is
unacceptable.” “Indefensible.” or, “has no place in our democracy.”
No “good guy with gun is the only thing that could’ve stopped bad guy
with gun.” Mother-poet-guitarist-legal observer’s character must die too.
Career criminal 34-count felon floods the zone riddling her body with dreck-
dipped bullets. Buckeye big lie “Haitians are eating the dogs” architect empties
his clip center mass. Puppy-killing princess of darkness, fires “domestic terrorist”
shots. “Weaponized vehicle” shots. Blonde Lil Eva Braun blasts “lunatic” rounds …
School Shooting Du Jour; War Of The Week; Nonstop Genocide—
Holy trinity, sacred triad of violence worshipped daily by Warfare State.
And besides, didn’t its high priest—pomade man— prance and pontificate to a roomful of medals “ Maximum lethality—not tepid legality.” “Violent effect—not politically correct?”
© 2026. Raymond Nat Turner, The Town Crier. All Rights Reserved.
https://blackagendareport.com/spinning- ... g-lie-gold